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Featured researches published by Chao-Te Li.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

The AMiBA Hexapod Telescope Mount

Patrick M. Koch; M. J. Kesteven; Hiroaki Nishioka; Homin Jiang; Kai-Yang Lin; Keiichi Umetsu; Yau-De Huang; Philippe Raffin; Ke-Jung Chen; Fabiola Ibanez-Romano; Guillaume Chereau; Chih-Wei Locutus Huang; Ming-Tang Chen; Paul T. P. Ho; Konrad Pausch; Klaus Willmeroth; Pablo Altamirano; Chia-Hao Chang; Shu-Hao Chang; Su-Wei Chang; Chih-Chiang Han; Derek Kubo; Chao-Te Li; Yu-Wei Liao; Guo-Chin Liu; Pierre Martin-Cocher; Peter Oshiro; Fu-Cheng Wang; Tashun Wei; Jiun-Huei Proty Wu

The Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy (AMiBA) is the largest hexapod astronomical telescope in current operation. We present a description of this novel hexapod mount with its main mechanical components—the support cone, universal joints, jack screws, and platform—and outline the control system with the pointing model and the operating modes that are supported. The AMiBA hexapod mount performance is verified based on optical pointing tests and platform photogrammetry measurements. The photogrammetry results show that the deformations in the inner part of the platform are less than 120 μm rms. This is negligible for optical pointing corrections, radio alignment, and radio phase errors for the currently operational seven-element compact configuration. The optical pointing error in azimuth and elevation is successively reduced by a series of corrections to about 0 4 rms which meets our goal for the seven-element target specifications.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The TIME-Pilot intensity mapping experiment

A. T. Crites; J. J. Bock; Charles M. Bradford; Tzu-Ching Chang; A. Cooray; L. Duband; Yan Gong; S. Hailey-Dunsheath; Jonathon Hunacek; Patrick M. Koch; Chao-Te Li; R. O'Brient; T. Prouve; E. Shirokoff; M. B. Silva; Z. Staniszewski; B. Uzgil; M. Zemcov

TIME-Pilot is designed to make measurements from the Epoch of Reionization (EoR), when the first stars and galaxies formed and ionized the intergalactic medium. This will be done via measurements of the redshifted 157.7 um line of singly ionized carbon ([CII]). In particular, TIME-Pilot will produce the first detection of [CII] clustering fluctuations, a signal proportional to the integrated [CII] intensity, summed over all EoR galaxies. TIME-Pilot is thus sensitive to the emission from dwarf galaxies, thought to be responsible for the balance of ionizing UV photons, that will be difficult to detect individually with JWST and ALMA. A detection of [CII] clustering fluctuations would validate current theoretical estimates of the [CII] line as a new cosmological observable, opening the door for a new generation of instruments with advanced technology spectroscopic array focal planes that will map [CII] fluctuations to probe the EoR history of star formation, bubble size, and ionization state. Additionally, TIME-Pilot will produce high signal-to-noise measurements of CO clustering fluctuations, which trace the role of molecular gas in star-forming galaxies at redshifts 0 < z < 2. With its unique atmospheric noise mitigation, TIME-Pilot also significantly improves sensitivity for measuring the kinetic Sunyaev-Zel’dovich (kSZ) effect in galaxy clusters. TIME-Pilot will employ a linear array of spectrometers, each consisting of a parallel-plate diffraction grating. The spectrometer bandwidth covers 185-323 GHz to both probe the entire redshift range of interest and to include channels at the edges of the band for atmospheric noise mitigation. We illuminate the telescope with f/3 horns, which balances the desire to both couple to the sky with the best efficiency per beam, and to pack a large number of horns into the fixed field of view. Feedhorns couple radiation to the waveguide spectrometer gratings. Each spectrometer grating has 190 facets and provides resolving power above 100. At this resolution, the longest dimension of the grating is 31 cm, which allows us to stack gratings in two blocks (one for each polarization) of 16 within a single cryostat, providing a 1x16 array of beams in a 14 arcminute field of view. Direct absorber TES sensors sit at the output of the grating on six linear facets over the output arc, allowing us to package and read out the detectors as arrays in a modular manner. The 1840 detectors will be read out with the NIST time-domain-multiplexing (TDM) scheme and cooled to a base temperature of 250 mK with a 3He sorption refrigerator. We present preliminary designs for the TIME-Pilot cryogenics, spectrometers, bolometers, and optics.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

A wideband analog correlator system for AMiBA

Chao-Te Li; Derek Kubo; Chih-Chiang Han; Chung-Cheng Chen; Ming-Tang Chen; Chun-Hsien Lien; Huei Wang; Ray-Ming Wei; Chia-Hsiang Yang; Tzi-Dar Chiueh; J. B. Peterson; M. J. Kesteven; Warwick E. Wilson

A wideband correlator system with a bandwidth of 16 GHz or more is required for Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy (AMiBA) to achieve the sensitivity of 10μK in one hour of observation. Double-balanced diode mixers were used as multipliers in 4-lag correlator modules. Several wideband modules were developed for IF signal distribution between receivers and correlators. Correlator outputs were amplified, and digitized by voltage-to-frequency converters. Data acquisition circuits were designed using field programmable gate arrays (FPGA). Subsequent data transfer and control software were based on the configuration for Australia Telescope Compact Array. Transform matrix method will be adopted during calibration to take into account the phase and amplitude variations of analog devices across the passband.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

AMiBA WIDEBAND ANALOG CORRELATOR

Chao-Te Li; Derek Kubo; Warwick E. Wilson; Kai-Yang Lin; Ming-Tang Chen; Paul T. P. Ho; Chung-Cheng Chen; Chih-Chiang Han; Peter Oshiro; Pierre Martin-Cocher; Chia-Hao Chang; Shu-Hao Chang; Pablo Altamirano; Homin Jiang; Tzi-Dar Chiueh; Chun-Hsien Lien; Huei Wang; Ray-Ming Wei; Chia-Hsiang Yang; J. B. Peterson; Su-Wei Chang; Yau-De Huang; Yuh-Jing Hwang; M. J. Kesteven; Patrick M. Koch; Guo-Chin Liu; Hiroaki Nishioka; Keiichi Umetsu; Tashun Wei; Jiun-Huei Proty Wu

A wideband analog correlator has been constructed for the Yuan-Tseh Lee Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy. Lag correlators using analog multipliers provide large bandwidth and moderate frequency resolution. Broadband intermediate frequency distribution, back-end signal processing, and control are described. Operating conditions for optimum sensitivity and linearity are discussed. From observations, a large effective bandwidth of around 10 GHz has been shown to provide sufficient sensitivity for detecting cosmic microwave background variations.


Modern Physics Letters A | 2004

THE AMIBA PROJECT

Paul T. P. Ho; Ming-Tang Chen; Tzi-Dar Chiueh; Tzihong Chiueh; Tah-Hsiung Chu; Homin Jiang; Patrick M. Koch; Derek Kubo; Chao-Te Li; M. J. Kesteven; Kai-Yang Lin; Guo-Chin Liu; K. Y. Lo; Cheng-Jiun Ma; Robert N. Martin; Kin-Wang Ng; Hiroaki Nishioka; Ferdinand Patt; J. B. Peterson; Philippe Raffin; Huei Wang; Yuh-Jing Hwang; Keiichi Umetsu; Jiun-Huei Proty Wu

The Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy is a 7-element interferometer to be sited on Mauna Loa, Hawaii. The seven 1.2m telescopes are mounted on a 6-meter platform, and operates at 3mm wavelength. At the time of this meeting, the telescope is under construction at the Vertex factory in Germany. It is due to be delivered in the middle of 2004. A 2-element prototype instrument has already been deployed to Mauna Loa where initial tests are underway.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2014

A 5 Giga Samples Per Second 8-Bit Analog to Digital Printed Circuit Board for Radio Astronomy

Homin Jiang; Howard Liu; Kim Guzzino; Derek Kubo; Chao-Te Li; Ray Chang; Ming-Tang Chen

We have designed, manufactured, and characterized an 8-bit 5 Giga samples per second (Gsps) ADC printed circuit board assembly (PCBA). An e2v EV8AQ160 ADC chip was used in the design and the board is plug compatible with the field programmable gate array (FPGA) board developed by the Collaboration for Astronomy Signal Processing and Electronics Research (CASPER) community. Astronomical interference fringes were demonstrated across a single baseline pair of antennas using two ADC boards on the Yuan Tseh Lee Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy (AMiBA) telescope. Several radio interferometers are using this board for bandwidth expansion, such as Submillimeter Array; also, several experimental telescopes are building new spectrometers using the same board. The ADC boards were attached directly to the Reconfigurable Open Architecture Computing Hardware (ROACH-2) FPGA board for processing of the digital output signals. This ADC board provides the capability of digitizing radio frequency signals from DC to 2 GHz (3 dB bandwidth), and to an extended bandwidth of 2.5 GHz (5 dB) with derated performance. The following worst-case performance parameters were obtained over 2 GHz: spur free dynamic range (SFDR) of 44 dB, signal-to-noise and distortion (SINAD) of 35 dB, and effective number of bits (ENOB) of 5.5.


international conference on electronics, circuits, and systems | 2012

Digitizing The Yuan Tseh Lee Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy by 5Gsps ADC boards

Homin Jiang; Howard Liu; Kim Guzzino; Derek Kubo; Chao-Te Li; Ray Chang

An 8 bits, 5 Giga samples per second Analog to Digital Printed Circuit Board has been designed by the authors for digitizing The Yuan Tseh Lee Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy(AMiBA) and other radio telescopes. Associated with the Field Programmable Gate Array platform developed by the Collaboration for Astronomy Signal Processing and Electronics Research community, AMiBA will have a digital correlator system in the future, that was fiscally difficult in 2001 when it was at design phase. The board can digitize input radio frequencies from DC up to 2.5GHz with a flatness of 5dB. The ENOB ranges from 6.1 to 6.5 bits across the 2.5GHz band, the SFDR from 41 dB to 48 dB, and the SINAD from 32 dB to 37.5 dB if the gain and offset tuning is applied.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2011

1.2 m Shielded Cassegrain Antenna for Close-Packed Radio Interferometer

Patrick M. Koch; Philippe Raffin; Yau-De Huang; Ming-Tang Chen; Chih-Chiang Han; Kai-Yang Lin; Pablo Altamirano; Christophe Granet; Paul T. P. Ho; Chih-Wei L. Huang; M. J. Kesteven; Chao-Te Li; Yu-Wei Liao; Guo-Chin Liu; Hiroaki Nishioka; Ching-Long Ong; Peter Oshiro; Keiichi Umetsu; Fu-Cheng Wang; Jiun-Huei Proty Wu

Interferometric millimeter observations of the cosmic microwave background and clusters of galaxies with arcminute resolutions require antenna arrays with short spacings. Having all antennas co-mounted on a single steerable platform sets limits to the overall weight. A 25 kg lightweight novel carbon-fiber design for a 1.2 m diameter Cassegrain antenna is presented. The finite element analysis predicts excellent structural behavior under gravity, wind, and thermal load. The primary- and secondary-mirror surfaces are aluminum-coated with a thin TiO2 top layer for protection. A low beam sidelobe level is achieved with a Gaussian feed-illumination pattern with edge taper, designed based on feed-horn antenna simulations and verified in a far-field beam-pattern measurement. A shielding baffle reduces interantenna coupling to below ~-135 dB. The overall antenna efficiency, including a series of efficiency factors, is estimated to be around 60%, with major losses coming from the feed spillover and secondary blocking. With this new antenna, a detection rate of about 50 clusters yr-1 is anticipated in a 13-element array operation.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2008

Platform deformation refined pointing and phase correction for the AMiBA hexapod telescope

Patrick M. Koch; M. J. Kesteven; Yu-Yen Chang; Yau-De Huang; Philippe Raffin; Ke-Yung Chen; Guillaume Chereau; Ming-Tang Chen; Paul T. P. Ho; Chih-Wie Huang; Fabiola Ibanez-Romano; Homin Jiang; Yu-Wei Liao; Kai-Yang Lin; Guo-Chin Liu; Sandor M. Molnar; Hiroaki Nishioka; Keiichi Umetsu; Fu-Cheng Wang; Jiun-Huei Proty Wu; Pablo Altamirano; Chia-Hao Chang; Shu-Hao Chang; Su-Wei Chang; Chi-Chiang Han; Derek Kubo; Chao-Te Li; Pierre Martin-Cocher; Peter Oshiro

The Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy (AMiBA) is a radio interferometer for research in cosmology, currently operating 7 0.6m diameter antennas co-mounted on a 6m diameter platform driven by a hexapod mount. AMiBA is currently the largest hexapod telescope. We briefly summarize the hexapod operation with the current pointing error model. We then focus on the upcoming 13-element expansion with its potential difficulties and solutions. Photogrammetry measurements of the platform reveal deformations at a level which can affect the optical pointing and the receiver radio phase. In order to prepare for the 13-element upgrade, two optical telescopes are installed on the platform to correlate optical pointing tests. Being mounted on different locations, the residuals of the two sets of pointing errors show a characteristic phase and amplitude difference as a function of the platform deformation pattern. These results depend on the telescopes azimuth, elevation and polarization position. An analytical model for the deformation is derived in order to separate the local deformation induced error from the real hexapod pointing error. Similarly, we demonstrate that the deformation induced radio phase error can be reliably modeled and calibrated, which allows us to recover the ideal synthesized beam in amplitude and shape of up to 90% or more. The resulting array efficiency and its limits are discussed based on the derived errors.


international conference on control and automation | 2009

A distributed control system for a radio telescope with six-meter hexapod mount

Homin Jiang; M. J. Kesteven; Warwick E. Wilson; Chao-Te Li; Nishioka Hiroaki; Ming-Tang Chen; Ted Huang; Patrick M. Koch; Joshua Chang; Derek Kubo

We report the operation and control system of the Array for Microwave Background Anisotropy (AMIBA), a radio astronomical telescope which has been completed and operating smoothly on the summit of Mauna Loa, Hawaii since 2005. The telescope mount with six meters diameter is the largest steward platform ever employed for astronomical purposes.

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Patrick M. Koch

Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics

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